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Charles Perrault

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Portrait (detail) by Philippe Lallemand, 1672
Charles Perrault
OccupationAuthor
GenreFantasy

Charles Perrault (12 January 162816 May 1703) was a French author who laid foundations for a new literary genre, the fairy tale, and whose best known tales include Le Petit Chaperon rouge (Little Red Riding Hood), La Belle au bois dormant (Sleeping Beauty), Le Maître chat ou le Chat botté (Puss in Boots), Cendrillon ou la petite pantoufle de verre (Cinderella), La Barbe bleue (Bluebeard), Le Petit Poucet (Hop o' My Thumb), Les Fées (Diamonds and Toads), La Marquise de Salusses ou la Patience de Griselidis (Patient Griselda), Les Souhaits ridicules (The Ridiculous Wishes), Peau d'Âne (Donkeyskin) and Riquet à la houppe (Ricky of the Tuft). Perrault's most famous stories are still in print today and have been made into operas, ballets (e.g., Tchaikovsky's Sleeping Beauty), plays, musicals, and films, both live-action and animation.

Biography

Perrault was born in Paris to a wealthy bourgeois family, son of Pierre Perrault and Paquette Le Clerc. His brother, Claude Perrault, is remembered as the architect of the severe east range of the Louvre, built between 1665 and 1680. Charles attended the best schools and studied law before embarking on a career in government service. He took part in the creation of the Academy of Sciences as well as the restoration of the Academy of Painting. When the Academy of Inscriptions and Belles-Lettres was founded in 1663, Perrault was appointed its secretary and serving Jean Baptiste Colbert's, finance minister to King Louis XIV.[1] He married in 1672 to Marie Guichon, 19, who died in 1678 after giving birth to a daughter. Also, the couple had three sons. When Colbert died in 1683, he lost his pension as a writer.

He was a major participant in the French Quarrel of the Ancients and the Moderns (Querelle des Anciens et des Modernes), which pitted supporters of the literature of Antiquity (the "Ancients") against supporters of the literature from the century of Louis XIV (the "Moderns"). He was on the side of the Moderns and wrote Le Siècle de Louis le Grand (The Century of Louis the Great, 1687) and Parallèle des Anciens et des Modernes (Parallel between Ancients and Moderns, 1688–1692) where he attempted to prove the superiority of the literature of his century.

In 1695, when he was 67, he lost his post as secretary. He decided to dedicate himself to his children and published Tales and Stories of the Past with Morals (Histoires ou Contes du Temps passé) (1697), with the subtitle: Tales of Mother Goose (Les Contes de ma Mère l'Oie). Its publication made him suddenly widely-known beyond his own circles and marked the beginnings of a new literary genre, the fairy tale. He had actually published it under the name of his last son (born in 1678), Pierre (Perrault) Darmancourt, (Armancourt was the name of a property he bought for him), probably fearful of criticism from the "Ancients".[2] In the tales, he used images from around him, such as the Chateau Ussé for Sleeping Beauty and in Puss-in-Boots, the Marquis of the Château d'Oiron, and contrasted his folktale subject matter, with details and asides and subtext drawn from the world of fashion. He died in Paris in 1703 at age 75.

See also

  • Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Charles Perrault" . Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  • Works by Charles Perrault at Project Gutenberg
  • SurLaLune Fairy Tale Pages: Fairy Tales of Charles Perrault
  • Biography, Bibliography (in French)
  • Great resource to introduce young children to Perrault Fairy Tales.
  • Free audio recordings (MP3, in French) of ten of the tales in prose and four of those in verse
  • Less formal recordings (also in French, by 'Aldor')

Notes

  1. ^ Sideman, B.B.: "The World's Best Fairy Tales", page 831. The Reader's Digest Association, 1967.
  2. ^ F. Collin, Charles Perrault, le fantôme du XVIIe siècle, Draveil, Colline, 1999.
Preceded by Seat 23
Académie française

1671–1703
Succeeded by